Research excellence on Brexit

As an institution with three Jean Monnet Chairs, Queen’s has a long-standing history of research into European integration.

With the imminent departure of the UK from the European Union, this expertise is key to the work of several high-profile Brexit-related research projects led by, or involving Queen’s academics, such as those funded by the ESRC’s UK in a Changing Europe programme.

Economic and Social Research Council Brexit Priority Grants

A collaborative project between leading researchers in Queen's University Belfast, Ulster University and the Committee on the Administration of Justice.

Led by Professor Colin Harvey from Queen’s, the projects aims to disentangle the legal elements of Brexit with regard to Northern Ireland and to communicate the related policy and practice implications in user-friendly formats.

Northern Ireland voted to remain in the EU and is the region of the UK most likely to be negatively affected by Brexit. It is now evident that the transformation of constitutional and legal relationships between Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and Britain flowing from the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement 1998 was premised on background assumptions about common membership of the EU.

The UK-wide vote to leave the EU is thus profoundly unsettling for the peace process, and it has already proved constitutionally destabilising in and beyond Northern Ireland. As Brexit is challenging many of the fundamentals of constitutional relationships across these islands, this project intends to advance knowledge and understanding as well as provide policy-relevant insights into the constitutional, conflict transformation, human rights and equality consequences.

Led by Professor John Garry from the School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics, the project focuses on the issue of ‘the border’ and engages citizens in two deliberative democracy exercises to consider the likely impact of new post-Brexit border arrangements.

The aim is to provide policy makers with balanced and systematic evidence, from citizens, that will inform the policy-making process.

As the Brexit negotiations proceed, policymakers will be confronted with the challenges of where exactly the post-exit border will lie and how ‘hard’ or ‘soft’ it will be. Citizens’ views on these issues will be an important factor for the negotiators to consider as the project explores how citizens of Northern Ireland perceive the ‘Brexit’ process and what their views are regarding the implications of Brexit for peace and stability in the region.

This project is led by the University of York with Dr Viviane Gravey from Queen’s University leading the Northern Ireland element of the project.

Aimed at policymakers and stakeholders, the project aims to develop scenarios for future models of environmental governance in the UK, with a particular focus on the devolution implications arising from environmental policy and to identify and account for patterns of change and stability in environmental policy post-Brexit.

This project will provide clear options for policy-makers and stakeholders by gathering views about how the sector should develop in future as well as a series of scenarios laying out how it could develop by mapping out the possible future contours of governance.

Read Viviane’s Briefing Paper on the challenges and opportunities of Brexit for the UK and Northern Ireland here

This project is led by the University of Birmingham with Dr Mark Flear from Queen’s University leading the Scottish and Northern Ireland elements of the project.

This project will address four main research questions. First, how do the laws of the four devolved nations, the UK and the EU currently interact in the field of health? Secondly, what will the impact be upon domestic health law in the UK post-Brexit?

Thirdly, how will changes to health policy and practice post-Brexit be managed and what mechanisms will need to be put in place? Finally, what will be the impact on broader international law/agreements on health?

These questions will be answered by focusing on four overlapping substantive areas: public health, mobility, research, pharmaceuticals and medical devices.

Insight and Analysis

Brexit Expertise

Contact Us

To find out more about the Brexit-related research and expertise within our university, please visit our Brexit Expertise sectionand contact any of our academics. Alternatively, why not send an email to qpol@qub.ac.uk with your request.